Ajidica
High Quality Person
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2006
- Messages
- 22,482
So, the British version of Newark and Detroit?Cardiff is Cardiff. It's almost as bad as Newport, which has one of the highest rates of home insurance premiums in Britain!
So, the British version of Newark and Detroit?Cardiff is Cardiff. It's almost as bad as Newport, which has one of the highest rates of home insurance premiums in Britain!
But people with schizophrenia usually don't just have one episode... and they are usually diagnosable... so, your point is pointless here.I'm pretty sure schizophrenic illusions are also impossible to explain to someone who never experienced it, and have roughly the same outcome.
So, the British version of Newark and Detroit?
But people with schizophrenia usually don't just have one episode... and they are usually diagnosable... so, your point is pointless here.
My question was how that would work.Well, I do believe God can reveal doctrine to people
Love is an emotion, not a means to convey a usually very specific message. I can understand how one would feel the presence/love/something of some deity, I don't understand how that feeling translated into specific revelations or even directs the choice of a specific religion.People don't all feel the same things as each other...
Take love, for example. I've known a few who have never felt romantic love in their lives.
How does one describe love to someone who has never felt it?
Poets have been trying for centuries.
My question was how that would work.
Love is an emotion, not a means to convey a usually very specific message. I can understand how one would feel the presence/love/something of some deity, I don't understand how that feeling translated into specific revelations or even directs the choice of a specific religion.
The religion someone subscribes to after having such an experience usually is the one which is most common for the location someone's at. Now either that's an incredible coincidence or the revelation of a God makes one search for a religion and settles for the supply which is present in the region. Or God is informing people from Texas Christianity plus choice denomination is the way to go, while telling people from Saudi Arabia Islam is the correct one.
Which would be an odd thing to do for a God who has to be pleased by specific rules or it denies you it's love and eternal blissful afterlife.
In short, personal experience leading to someone believing in the existence of God I can totally relate to. That experience leading to a specific set of rules seems incredibly arbitrary to me.
If they have schizophrenia, they meet the criteria to be diagnosed with it per DSM-IV...
He looks at observations and goes about interpreting them in all sorts of creative ways.How does an idea form in the mind of a scientist?
You're either not reading what I write or what I reply to, or you find the question too hard to answer.Now the thought of an outside force putting thoughts into one's head may seem strange, and an athiest may deny God the ability to do so.
So the British Rust Belt then. Remind me never to visit Cardiff if I visit the UK.
I've never had any specific revelations, and would be highly, highly skeptical of anyone who claims they had... I don't say it is impossible.Love is an emotion, not a means to convey a usually very specific message. I can understand how one would feel the presence/love/something of some deity, I don't understand how that feeling translated into specific revelations or even directs the choice of a specific religion.
This has often crossed my mind. It is certainly an uncertainty.The religion someone subscribes to after having such an experience usually is the one which is most common for the location someone's at. Now either that's an incredible coincidence or the revelation of a God makes one search for a religion and settles for the supply which is present in the region. Or God is informing people from Texas Christianity plus choice denomination is the way to go, while telling people from Saudi Arabia Islam is the correct one.
Well, I think you know my take, but I will reiterate.In short, personal experience leading to someone believing in the existence of God I can totally relate to. That experience leading to a specific set of rules seems incredibly arbitrary to me.
Why can people who think God talks to them not be diagnosed?
If I'm to understand that heaven is full of people with zero capacity for critical thought, then I'd frankly prefer purgatory.Oh ye of little faith.
Unless you have the faith of a child, you cannot enter heaven.
My question was actually quite serious. Assuming God communicates or emotionally affects certain people (interestingly only those who already believe in him), what about shizophrenic people who simply hear voices but attribute them to their deity of choice? How can one tell the difference?Because that would be religious persecution. After all, we cannot prove that god did not talk to them. We just sorta take in on faith that they are either crazy or fraudulent.![]()
Having faith doesn't mean the absence of critical thought. It means understand that some things are beyond you, something that requires critical thought to come to terms with.If I'm to understand that heaven is full of people with zero capacity for critical thought, then I'd frankly prefer purgatory.
Who said that God only communicates with hose who already believe in Him? That's how a lot of people come to believe in Him... He effects them spiritually.My question was actually quite serious. Assuming God communicates or emotionally affects certain people (interestingly only those who already believe in him), what about shizophrenic people who simply hear voices but attribute them to their deity of choice? How can one tell the difference?
And especially, since we already have the claim that the latter can be diagnosed, it must be possible to clearly distinguish it from true divine inspiration, so that would mean that true divine inspiration could also be diagnosed, wouldn't it?